Battleship - Rocks & Minerals
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Transcript Battleship - Rocks & Minerals
From RegentsEarth.com
How to play “Earth Science Battleship”
Divide the class into two teams, Red and Purple. Choose which team goes first.
The main screen is divided into 49 boxes. The first team chooses a box by letter
and number, E4 for instance.
Each team or the team captain must be told which squares hide their ships.
(see notes below this slide)
Click on the ‘Q’ at the center of the square. Be
careful to click only on the ‘Q’. A question will appear.
IF the team answers the question correctly, click on ‘return to
board’. This will take you back to the main game board.
Now click anywhere else in the box (except the ‘Q’).
The box will disappear and you find out if you
hit and destroyed one of the enemy ships.
If the team did not answer the question correctly simply return to the main board
and allow the other team to choose a box and answer a question.
The first team to successfully “sink” all four of the other team’s ships wins.
The RED team must sink purple ships and the PURPLE team must sink red ships.
(if you’re playing at home to review, click on ‘answer’ for the correct response)
Get out your reference tables. Let’s play!
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Question A1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rocks are most likely sedimentary in origin?
ANSWER
A&E
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Question A2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rock is formed from molten material that solidified deep
within the Earth?
ANSWER
Rock B
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Question A3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rock would most likely contain fossils?
ANSWER
Sandstone
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Question A4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which of these rocks may have formed from granite that was
subjected to high heat and pressure?
ANSWER
Gneiss
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Question A5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rock shows banding of minerals and formed as a result
of the recrystallization of unmelted material.
ANSWER
Gneiss
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Question A6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rock formed from sediments with a wide range of sizes?
ANSWER
Conglomerate
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Question A7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which physical property of minerals is illustrated
by the flat surfaces seen in the diagram?
ANSWER
Cleavage
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Question B1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which two processes involved in sedimentary
rock formation are illustrated in the diagram above?
ANSWER
Compaction and cementation
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Question B2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which of these rock samples is most probably basalt?
ANSWER
Sample D (contains pyroxene)
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Question B3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which two of the igneous rocks listed above formed closest to the surface
of the Earth?
ANSWER
C and D (fine texture)
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Question B4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rock is illustrated in the diagram?
ANSWER
Obsidian or Basaltic Glass
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Question B5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What is the name of the structure illustrated above?
ANSWER
(Silicon-Oxygen) Tetrahedron
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Question B6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Rock B is most probably.................................
ANSWER
Gabbro or Peridotite
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Question B7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which two rocks formed deep within the Earth?
ANSWER
Rocks A and B (coarse texture)
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Question C1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What kind of rock is sample #4?
ANSWER
Shale
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Question C2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Rock sample 5 is most probably.............................
ANSWER
Gneiss (coarse texture & banding)
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Question C3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which of these correctly shows the structure of the
silicon-oxygen tetrahedron?
ANSWER
#4
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Question C4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Rock B is most probably.........................
ANSWER
Granite
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Question C5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which of these could be a
magnified view of a sample
of Rhyolite?
ANSWER
Sample 2 (intergrown crystals)
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Question C6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which mineral identification test
would involve the scale shown here?
ANSWER
The scratch test
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Question C7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Why do the rocks limestone and marble both bubble
when in contact with acid?
ANSWER
Both are made of the mineral calcite
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Question D1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What causes the characteristic
shape of the quartz crystal shown
in the diagram?
ANSWER
The internal arrangement of atoms
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Question D2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which of these is the basic building block of the mineral quartz?
ANSWER
#1
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Question D3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
ANSWER
Choice 4
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Question D4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What rock is this?
ANSWER
Limestone
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Question D5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
ANSWER
Choice 1
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Question D6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which test used for the identification of minerals is illustrated here?
ANSWER
Streak test
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Question D7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Both graphite and diamond
are made entirely of carbon
atoms. What accounts for
the different properties of
these two minerals.
ANSWER
Different internal arrangements of atoms
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Question E1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
The cave formations seen
here are created by the
interactions of water and
this mineral.............
ANSWER
Calcite
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Question E2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What probably caused the distortion of structure
seen in this rock?
ANSWER
Heat and/or pressure (metamorphism)
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Question E3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which rock is formed by the low-grade metamorphism
of shale?
ANSWER
Slate
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Question E4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Which foliated, shiny rock contains mica, quartz, feldspar,
amphibole, and garnet but no pyroxene?
ANSWER
Phyllite
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Question E5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Rock A might be (give one of several possible answers)
ANSWER
Conglomerate, Breccia, Sandstone, Siltstone or Shale
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Question E6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Rock C is coarse grained. What is it?
ANSWER
Gneiss
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Question E7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What term describes the way a mineral reflects light?
ANSWER
Luster
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Question F1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
In what kind of environment would deposits of rock gypsum form?
ANSWER
Under water – a marine environment
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Question F2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
Name a volcanic, vesicular, igneous rock which contains
plagioclase feldspar, quartz, and potassium feldspar.
ANSWER
Vesicular Rhyolite
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Question F3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
It’s metallic, black or silver and fractures. What is it?
ANSWER
Magnetite
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Question F4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
It will scratch Plagioclase feldspar and contains no iron. What is it?
ANSWER
Quartz
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Question F5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
It forms from precipitates of biologic origin. What is it?
ANSWER
Limestone
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Question F6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
It’s bioclastic but it’s never crystalline. What is it?
ANSWER
Bituminous coal
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Question F7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
It’s plutonic, felsic, low density, and contains intergrown
crystals that are 4.5 mm in diameter. It is probably....
ANSWER
Granite (less likely, Diorite)
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Question G1
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
According to the rock cycle diagram (ESRT page 6), the first
two steps in the transformation of metamorphic rock into sedimentary
rock are...............................
ANSWER
Weathering and erosion
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Question G2
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
It cleaves into thin, flexible sheets and it contains
magnesium. What is it used for?
ANSWER
Construction materials (biotite mica)
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Question G3
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What word should replace
letter C?
ANSWER
Coarse
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Question G4
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What characteristic of some
minerals is illustrated in the
diagram?
ANSWER
Cleavage
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Question G5
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What is rock X?
ANSWER
Sandstone
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Question G6
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What is rock Y?
ANSWER
Gneiss
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Question G7
Click timer to start
1 min. countdown.
What does B mean?
ANSWER
The color of a mineral in powdered form
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